Crypto Money Laundering Dropped Almost 30% in 2023: Report

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Crypto money laundering saw a major decrease of nearly 30% in 2023, Chainalysis’ newly released 2024 Crypto Crime Report revealed.

The report also stated that total funds sent between illicit addresses dropped by 14.9% as well.

According to Chainalysis, the shrinking numbers can be attributed to an overall reduction in total cryptocurrency transaction volume as well as efforts by bad actors to conceal illicit activity.

Additionally, despite the general decrease in the role of illicit services, the number of illicit funds going to DeFi protocols has increased.

“We attribute this primarily to the overall growth of DeFi generally during the time period, but must also note that DeFi’s inherent transparency generally makes it a poor choice for obfuscating the movement of funds,” the report stated.

Lazarus Finds Its Replacement For Sinbad In Crypto Mixer YoMix


Chainalysis’ Crypto Crime Report further highlighted that funds sent to mixers from illicit addresses decreased by nearly half a billion dollars last year “likely due to law enforcement and regulatory efforts.”

The blockchain data firms’ latest statistics follow the November 2023 sanctioning of Sinbad, a crypto mixer utilized by North Korean state-sponsored hacking group Lazarus Group, by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).

The report notes that YoMix has taken over Sinbad’s role in supporting North Korea-affiliated hackers, with the crypto mixer experiencing “inflows growing by more than 5x” throughout 2023.

Chainalysis Warns Of Bad Actors Evading Detection With New Strategy


Correspondingly, the report found that “money laundering actually became less concentrated at the deposit address level in 2023,” suggesting that crypto criminals are spreading their funds across addresses “in order to better conceal it from law enforcement and exchange compliance teams.”

The new tactic “may be a strategy to lessen the impact of any one deposit address being frozen for suspicious activity” and may require those fighting crypto criminals to possess “greater diligence” and “understanding of interconnectedness through on-chain activity than in the past.”

“The changes in money laundering strategy we’ve seen from crypto criminals like Lazarus Group serve as an important reminder that the most sophisticated illicit actors are always adapting their money laundering strategy and exploiting new kinds of crypto services,” the report concluded. “Law enforcement and compliance teams can be more effective by studying these new laundering methods and becoming familiar with the on-chain patterns associated with them.”



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